CIG   05423
CENTRO DE INVESTIGACIONES GEOLOGICAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Evidence of Warm Seas in High Latitudes Of Southern South America During the Early Cretaceous
Autor/es:
RICHIANO, SEBASTIÁN M.; SIAL, ALCIDES N.; GÓMEZ PERAL, LUCÍA E.; POIRÉ, DANIEL G.; GÓMEZ DACAL, ALEJANDRO R.; SPALLETTI, LUIS A.
Revista:
CRETACEOUS RESEARCH (PRINT)
Editorial:
ACADEMIC PRESS LTD-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Referencias:
Año: 2018 vol. 95 p. 8 - 20
ISSN:
0195-6671
Resumen:
The Berriasian?Early Valanginian time interval is well represented in the Rio Mayer Formation in the Río Guanaco area (Austral Basin, Argentina). From this locality, well preserved belemnite shells of the genus Belemnopsis sp. and black shales are used to unravel the main palaeoenvironmental conditions of the seas at these high palaeo-latitudes (60º) of southern South America during the Early Cretaceous. Rare earth elements plus yttrium (REY) analyses performed in belemnites rostra reveal Ce anomalies and Y/Ho values that together suggest high oxidizing superficial seawater conditions. On the other hand, sedimentological, ichnological and geochemical (TOC, Ce anomaly and MnO) data, analyzed from the black shale matrix of belemnites, show that they may have been deposited on the bottom of the basin under oxygen deficiency. Cathodoluminescence, scanning electron microscopy, major and trace element geochemistry allowed determining the best preserved microtextures of the belemnites in order to obtain reliable δ18O and δ13C results. Palaeo-temperatures calculated from the δ18O results, characterized the studied marine interval from Austral Basin as warm. The belemnites from this Lower Cretaceous succession may have lived under well oxygenated and warm seawater conditions, which were markedly different from those recorded in seafloor sediments (black shales) deposited under suboxic to anoxic conditions. The integration of global temperature data for the Berriasian to Early Valanginian interval, allows suggesting a different gradient of temperature for the austral Patagonia at the Southern Hemisphere in relation to those recorded in the Northern Hemisphere.